登陆注册
15455600000036

第36章 CHAPTER 12(4)

'No, no,' said Albert's uncle; 'but look here. Do you see how silly you've been? And I thought you promised your Father -' And then he gave us a long talking-to. He can make you feel most awfully Small. At last he stopped, and we said we were very sorry, and he said, 'You know I promised to take you all to the pantomime?'

So we said, 'Yes,' and knew but too well that now he wasn't going to. Then he went on -'Well, I will take you if you like, or I will take Noel to the sea for a week to cure his cold. Which is it to be?'

Of course he knew we should say, 'Take Noel' and we did; but Dicky told me afterwards he thought it was hard on H. O.

Albert's uncle stayed till Eliza came in, and then he said good night in a way that showed us that all was forgiven and forgotten.

And we went to bed. It must have been the middle of the night when Oswald woke up suddenly, and there was Alice with her teeth chattering, shaking him to wake him.

'Oh, Oswald!' she said, 'I am so unhappy. Suppose I should die in the night!'

Oswald told her to go to bed and not gas. But she said, 'I must tell you; I wish I'd told Albert's uncle. I'm a thief, and if I die to-night I know where thieves go to.' So Oswald saw it was no good and he sat up in bed and said - 'Go ahead.' So Alice stood shivering and said - 'I hadn't enough money for the telegram, so I took the bad sixpence out of the exchequer. And I paid for it with that and the fivepence I had. And I wouldn't tell you, because if you'd stopped me doing it I couldn't have borne it; and if you'd helped me you'd have been a thief too. Oh, what shall I do?'

Oswald thought a minute, and then he said -'You'd better have told me. But I think it will be all right if we pay it back. Go to bed. Cross with you? No, stupid! Only another time you'd better not keep secrets.'

So she kissed Oswald, and he let her, and she went back to bed.

The next day Albert's uncle took Noel away, before Oswald had time to persuade Alice that we ought to tell him about the sixpence.

Alice was very unhappy, but not so much as in the night: you can be very miserable in the night if you have done anything wrong and you happen to be awake. I know this for a fact.

None of us had any money except Eliza, and she wouldn't give us any unless we said what for; and of course we could not do that because of the honour of the family. And Oswald was anxious to get the sixpence to give to the telegraph people because he feared that the badness of that sixpence might have been found out, and that the police might come for Alice at any moment. I don't think I ever had such an unhappy day. Of course we could have written to Albert's uncle, but it would have taken a long time, and every moment of delay added to Alice's danger. We thought and thought, but we couldn't think of any way to get that sixpence. It seems a small sum, but you see Alice's liberty depended on it. It was quite late in the afternoon when I met Mrs Leslie on the Parade.

She had a brown fur coat and a lot of yellow flowers in her hands.

She stopped to speak to me, and asked me how the Poet was. I told her he had a cold, and I wondered whether she would lend me sixpence if I asked her, but I could not make up my mind how to begin to say it. It is a hard thing to say - much harder than you would think. She talked to me for a bit, and then she suddenly got into a cab, and said -'I'd no idea it was so late,' and told the man where to go. And just as she started she shoved the yellow flowers through the window and said, 'For the sick poet, with my love,' and was driven off.

Gentle reader, I will not conceal from you what Oswald did. He knew all about not disgracing the family, and he did not like doing what I am going to say: and they were really Noel's flowers, only he could not have sent them to Hastings, and Oswald knew he would say 'Yes' if Oswald asked him. Oswald sacrificed his family pride because of his little sister's danger. I do not say he was a noble boy - I just tell you what he did, and you can decide for yourself about the nobleness.

He put on his oldest clothes - they're much older than any you would think he had if you saw him when he was tidy - and he took those yellow chrysanthemums and he walked with them to Greenwich Station and waited for the trains bringing people from London. He sold those flowers in penny bunches and got tenpence. Then he went to the telegraph office at Lewisham, and said to the lady there:

'A little girl gave you a bad sixpence yesterday. Here are six good pennies.'

The lady said she had not noticed it, and never mind, but Oswald knew that 'Honesty is the best Policy', and he refused to take back the pennies. So at last she said she should put them in the plate on Sunday. She is a very nice lady. I like the way she does her hair.

Then Oswald went home to Alice and told her, and she hugged him, and said he was a dear, good, kind boy, and he said 'Oh, it's all right.'

We bought peppermint bullseyes with the fourpence I had over, and the others wanted to know where we got the money, but we would not tell.

Only afterwards when Noel came home we told him, because they were his flowers, and he said it was quite right. He made some poetry about it. I only remember one bit of it.

The noble youth of high degree Consents to play a menial part, All for his sister Alice's sake, Who was so dear to his faithful heart.

But Oswald himself has never bragged about it. We got no treasure out of this, unless you count the peppermint bullseyes.

同类推荐
  • 青楼梦

    青楼梦

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Fifth String

    The Fifth String

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金箓放生仪

    金箓放生仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 全秦文

    全秦文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 等集众德三昧经

    等集众德三昧经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 这个有你的城市怎能没我

    这个有你的城市怎能没我

    初夏,窗外的榆树都开着绿绿的叶子,这个城市的每一个角落都在享受着太阳公公的沐浴,好不惬意,此时上午十一点五分。“此时长得美的人还在床上躺着,长得丑的人却已经起来了。”大姨妈来访实在是难受的安小闪好不容易请掉一天假终于逮着机会刺激她这一群小伙伴了,同时心里暗暗的把她的上司们骂过来了一遍,就请一天假好不容易批准了,又是扣工资,又是扣全勤的,想起来安小闪就来气,只知道剥削我们劳动人民。
  • 重生之星光天下

    重生之星光天下

    他是来自2012年的重生人士,他拥有万能的未来电脑。他是20世纪末最火爆男团之一,《还珠》是他的出名作。他被誉为21世纪最强娱乐大亨,十二首神曲让他成为神曲出品人。他自导自演的《诛仙》、《紫川》成为电影史上最成功的作品。他就是那个一直追寻洛燕的陈宇......
  • 世界的正反面,天平

    世界的正反面,天平

    永恒第二世来到了人类世界,在那里首先解决了叶风云的事情,并开启了自己的人类世界之旅。。。可是这个旅途不易啊。。。
  • 蒹葭:乱世红颜

    蒹葭:乱世红颜

    蒹葭苍苍,白露为霜,所谓伊人,在水一方。她如那苍茫的蒹葭一般,若飘若止,若有若无,望之而不可及,见之而不可求。烽火乱世,是孑然一身守护家国无恙,还是与心爱之人谱写一曲锦绣华章;是携手天涯笑看天家,还是锦衣华服睥睨天下;是曲终人散琴声黯哑,还是琴瑟和鸣凤求鸾答;多舛命运的又将经历怎样的艰险狡诈,一切是命定还是人为,结局是否早已写好,金戈铁马,是否会踏出一个盛世繁华……
  • 做人有原则

    做人有原则

    本书归纳了48个做人必须坚持的原则,并给出了“建议与忠告”,对人生有积极的指导作用。
  • 暧昧的伤

    暧昧的伤

    霸道的美术才子,平凡的小可爱,关系暧昧,他却选择了别人,在她心里留下了一道无法磨灭的伤痛。她选择逃离,却又命中注定遇到同样有画画才能的另一个他。
  • 韩氏集团探案集之黑森林的秘密.

    韩氏集团探案集之黑森林的秘密.

    作品讲述了阳光小学三年级小学生林逸和他的伙伴们收到了一封奇怪的邮件由此展开的奇妙探险......
  • 御气九极天

    御气九极天

    林旭本以为自己的人生就此完蛋,但是天无绝人之路。在林旭生命即将走到尽头时,一个偶遇让他走上了新的道路。林旭穿越到了一个新的位面,他发现这个宇宙并不像他想的那样简单。九极天,这片繁华位面的名字,御气,魔法,丹药,布阵,炼器……不管是哪行哪业,在这里,只要是强者就会受到世人的崇拜。
  • 灭天神瞳

    灭天神瞳

    一朝,成杀人犯,成野种,少年怒极而血脉觉醒。夺刀惹强敌,走上逃亡之路。寿命七天的种族,驾驭一切魔兽的“人类”......所有的不寻常促使少年解开身世之谜和惊天大战之谜。星天域,创世域,地冥域,逆乱无数,强者横行。一把刀,一双瞳,这一世少年不愿被欺,修炼巅峰,杀破三域!
  • 重生农家三姑娘

    重生农家三姑娘

    “保孩子!”这是前世姚三三听到的最后一句话,难产关头丈夫公婆毫不犹豫地选择了孩子,姚三三悲凉地坠入无边黑暗。睁眼醒来,她竟然重生回到了十二岁,依旧是爹渣娘懦,依旧是家徒四壁,依旧是重男轻女,她依旧是那个像空气一样,被忽视、被牺牲的农家三女儿……没有金手指,没有随身系统、没有万能空间,好吧,这就是一个重生女人的独立奋斗逆转人生的故事,当然,美满爱情也是必须的。